EJToday is SEJ's selection of new and outstanding stories on environmental topics in print and on the air, updated every weekday. SEJ also offers a free e-mailed digest of the day's EJToday postings, called SEJ-beat. SEJ members are subscribed automatically, but may opt out here. Non-members may subscribe here. EJToday is also available via RSS feed. Please see Editorial Guidelines for EJToday content.
"Wood Burning Creates Top Cancer Risk in Oregon's Air, EPA Says"
Portland Oregonian, 07/09/2009"Pollution from burning wood in stoves, fireplaces and elsewhere is the top cancer risk in Oregon's air, according to a U.S. Environmental Protection Agency analysis."
Oregon Legislature Bans Field Burning
Eugene Register-Guard, 06/30/2009The Oregon legislature Monday sent to the governor a bill that would phase out the longstanding practice of burning off agricultural fields growing grass seed.
"Killing Fields: Field Burning'S Deadly Legacy"
Eugene Weekly, 06/19/2009The 1988 highway death of a family in Oregon, blinded by smoke from fields being burned for weed control, was a story so moving that it spawned a novel. Field burning is so common in Oregon that it threatens people's lungs and health. A legislative struggle to ban it remains unresolved.
"Defending Fall Creek"
Eugene Weekly, 06/12/2009Lawsuits and tree-sits are among the tactics that activists in the Eugene, Oregon, area are using to resist clearcutting of a patch of ancient forest under the BLM's Western Oregon Plan Revisions.
"Feds Ready to Spend $2 Billion on Hanford Cleanup"
AP, 05/28/2009The economic stimulus will bring another $2 billion in cleanup funds to the Hanford nuclear reservation in Washington state.
Chase for Wind Power Turns to Public Lands
Portland Oregonian, 05/25/2009"Rows of tall turbines have already remade the landscape on wheat farms and ridgelines on private land around the region. But so far there have been no wind farms built on public land in the Northwest. That's about to change."
Gov. Orders Wash. Agencies To Cut Greenhouse Emissions
Seattle Times, 05/22/2009"Gov. Chris Gregoire on Thursday ordered [Washington] state to reach agreement with its single largest polluter to cut greenhouse-gas emissions by half over the next 15 years."
Judge Mulls Breaching Snake River Dams
LA Times, 05/20/2009"Federal officials, who have spent much of the last decade 'avoiding their obligations under the Endangered Species Act,' need a contingency plan to save the endangered fish, the judge says."
"A Mountain of Trouble"
Eugene Register-Guard, 05/11/2009An "eco-friendly" developer in Sweet Home, Oregon, has brought "a nightmare of garbage-dumping fines from state environmental regulators, an asbestos investigation by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, an investigation by Oregon charities regulators, and numerous civil lawsuits from angry creditors."

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